Publications by authors named "Joyce Rodrigues do Prado"

Species delimitation studies based on integrating different datasets such as genomic, morphometric, and cytogenetics data are rare in studies focused on Neotropical rodents. As a consequence, the evolutionary history of most of these genera remains poorly understood. Proechimys is a highly diverse and widely distributed genus of Neotropical spiny rats with unique traits like multiple sympatry, micro-habitat segregation, and fuzzy species limits.

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The tribe Oryzomyini is an impressive group of rodents, comprising 30 extant genera and an estimated 147 species. Recent remarkable advances in the understanding of the diversity, taxonomy and systematics of the tribe have mostly derived from analyses of single or few genetic markers. However, the evolutionary history and biogeography of Oryzomyini, its origin and diversification across the Neotropics, remain unrevealed.

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Taxa with broad geographic ranges that occur in different biomes and exhibit plastic morphological traits and/or adaptations to particular habitats make inferences about species boundaries especially challenging. However, technological and conceptual advances in the generation and analysis of genomic data have advanced the description of biodiversity. Here we address the outstanding questions about the delimitation of species in the genus Holochilus, a rodent with morphological specializations to wetland habitats distributed throughoutthe South America, using genome-wide SNP and morphometric data.

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The genus Aegialomys was described to encompass the former Oryzomys xanthaeolus group, and includes nowadays two species: A. xanthaeolus and A. galapagoensis.

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